0-1847-] 



THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



: - 



^^^AT.-Pure samples of RED STRAW 

 ^ rf ^?art 8 of B Eng?and and Scotland, are on sale 



r. The! none of tl 



ri?hm,«s f *■ fl as i^ een - drained u four feet dee p> and ?°° d •— 



although the flooding is not thus prevent^ " 

 consequences of the floods are converted 1 



fall the superfluous moisture passes off wit 



rapi.uty, dl the matter. - - 



'i the L'r.jiin.i. which nr.s : - 



|» :> \ININli, Sa?. — Practical information < 



mjEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING.— Hoi 

 ma can be roofed at less than one- 



FRAXCIS R "*c|^"™ s £^, Belfast, 



DOTTER'S GUANO.- WHEAT SOWING._The 

 'PERUVIAN GUANO, AFRICAN GUANO, 



imtnltmul ttaittte 



TRDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1847. 





t not fm-jet i 

 They will !»( 



and their con- 

 ubjects referred 



the body, with 

 ie preparation of 



ected or confirmed for 



gent farmer tr 



to approacii any department I 

 one of simple inquiry: things must 1 

 — ^em! theory is mete),- the 1c 



report we lay before them, 

 indebted to Sir Robert Pei 



ing rothinghii! 



-'' d p^cM>ht 



honest purp< 









or pleading 















.,■•. 



he point in discussion at a 



• w 















factor^ by any 













phers of the day 



Let it not 













;>r..l 



connection with 



- 



:!..■(■ 



mplc experiment— on< 



rly the' man for 



^ffourwTj 0derat f ^0 charge made to hi 



g ^ We Si r ° f ° r the m °™y sunk «P° 



-'■"Mr pArl-, 1 !^, we , are not wrong i: 



' J^ 500 or 600 acr e S f a,read y d ™ne< 



^ fence, fi ? 7 th,S means > »v "nW,, - dmv, 

 ^•2' S J ;n g n Up USe]ess «&*«. fellmg 2 



I *^«lei/ U . .Sup orund ' 



™m, the productiveness o 



| ^indeed from the enormous, . v >»< roa-ed. I 

 ^bSoBeiT 6 S^^hTprod^ce 1 o^Wh'ea 

 iiTj rWpect to t?e dS 6 * 1 by Similar °P erati ons 

 ?^T i?l a11, wh .? bave^hi^^rtnnut"?. 



can find their wav into 

 3 dislocated; and the ex- 

 5 apparently tedious opera- 

 "ormed bv boys is not the 

 ^operation: Whore the 

 «, they deliver 

 ^spools or wells so con- 

 •^ can at all 

 es is thus conducted to a 



ie. (See pages 580 



n farm matters, his mode of argument requires in- 

 estigation. The points, too, on which it turns are 

 ■ terming, and w-oitln < I ox , ruination. 



There is. we imagine, a tendency amongst a cer- 

 lin class to put farmers very much in the back- 

 round, whenever they and the philosophers arc 



y farmer knows. Do the\ 



cultivation of the Turnip crop? That is the 

 ion. And we maintain that it is as clearly for 

 ractical man to say whether Turnips are or are 



!aii.„ ,-r..|. asi.'U f r t he scientific man to 



"lA E. n \V." can V^thiTverdict to^be 

 ;ly opposed to any existing theory of the 

 ill of plants, he knocks that theory on the 



should lead to the ruin of all tie scientific 

 lations of the day. Happily we have not the 

 ;st expectation of any such calamity. We put 

 alter thus strongly on!\ because of that light 



• 



■., -:.uu 



s question. What, 

 m that the Potato 



itirfj" if* 



,,d by the former It is the practical .hall prove 



■:■:■.:■:■/;■■.■■■■/■;■: , ■; - ..■,...'--■ ^ : ^- .,,,.,, 



'But we have not room to pursue the subject 



>•,, ... ... 



arranging and explaining them. 



their respec- 



lopher'to'th' 

 Let theagr 



i |<. •) ,. -. , . ;•>< :, .,,:,'- r .;-.■,; I.y o- r - 

 >.<■<]: 



;<■' d - l: 



i the theory of the growth of plants, s 



